|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Arthur Wesley Dow taught at major American arts training
institutions for 30 years including Teachers College, Columbia
University; the Art Students League of New York; Pratt Institute;
and his own Ipswich Summer School of Art. His ideas were quite
revolutionary for the period, he taught that rather than copying
nature, art should be created by elements of the composition, like
line, mass and color. He taught many of America's leading artists
and craftspeople, including Georgia O'Keeffe, Charles J. Martin,
two of the Overbeck Sisters and the Byrdcliffe Colony.
First published in 1899, Arthur Wesley Dow's "Composition" has
probably influenced more Americans than any other text to think of
visual form and composition in relation to artistic modernity.
While Dow is known as the mentor of Georgia O'Keeffe and Max Weber,
his legacy as a proponent of modern art has suffered undeserved
neglect by recent artists and art historians. In "Composition" Dow
develops a system for teaching students to create freely
constructed images on the basis of harmonic relations between
lines, colors, and dark and light patterns. Greatly influenced by
Japanese art, he expounds a theory of "flat" formal equilibrium as
an essential component of telling pictorial creation. Generations
of teachers and their public school pupils learned from Dow's
orientalism and adopted basic postimpressionist principles without
even knowing the term. The reappearance of Dow's practical,
well-illustrated guide, enhanced by Joseph Masheck's discussion of
its historical ramifications, is an important event for all
concerned with the visual arts and the intellectual antecedents of
American modernism.
A mentor to Georgia O'Keeffe, Dow literally "wrote the book" on
composition. First published in 1899, this manual influenced
generations of teachers and students. Relevant to all of the visual
arts, it employs a workbook format to impart principles regarding
harmonic relations between lines, color, and dark and light
patterns.
Arthur Wesley Dow was an American painter, printmaker,
photographer, and influential arts educator. He taught many of
America's leading artists and craftspeople, including Georgia
O'Keeffe, two of the Overbeck Sisters and the Byrdcliffe Colony.
Dow was largely inspired by Japanese art to this work on
Compositionn.
|
You may like...
Donker Web
Fanie Viljoen
Paperback
(2)
R270
R238
Discovery Miles 2 380
What We Buried
Kate A. Boorman
Paperback
R294
R253
Discovery Miles 2 530
Specials
Scott Westerfeld
Paperback
R265
R179
Discovery Miles 1 790
|